It has been shown that
people who smoke are less likely to develop Parkinson's disease; the evidence
is fairly convincing, although this "protective" influence of
smoking is not strong. Several small studies have also been done that suggest
a similar effect of smoking on Alzheimer's disease. These were retrospective
studies, i.e. information was gathered by looking back into the past - in
this case people with Alzheimer's disease had their previous smoking habits
compared with those of people without Alzheimer's.
In order to get a better estimate of any protection offered by smoking,
researchers in the UK studied the smoking habits of male physicians for
over 40 years have looked at the occurrence of Alzheimer's disease and
other forms of dementia. This is what is called a prospective study, and
is far more reliable than retrospective studies.
In 1951 over 34,000 male physicians on the British medical register who
were living in the UK gave information on their smoking habits. Changes
in these habits were recorded at 6 - 11 year intervals up to 1998. By
that time, 24,000 of the physicians had died. Dementia (Alzheimer's or
other forms) was mentioned in the death certificates of 473 of those who
died in the last 35 years. (Deaths earlier than this time were not analyzed,
as they were too close to the first record of smoking habits, i.e. smoking
might not have had time to exert an effect.)
The occurrence of dementias in those physicians who were smokers was
compared with that in physicians who had never smoked or were ex-smokers.
(The ex-smokers who died with dementia had stopped smoking on average
34 years earlier, so that it is most unlikely that earlier smoking played
any role in their deaths.)
The two main types of dementia recorded were Alzheimer's disease and
vascular dementia. This was based on the diagnoses on the death certificates,
in some cases backed up by autopsy reports.
Each subject who died due to dementia was matched with four non-dementia
physicians born in the same year, and each subject who died where dementia
was mentioned as an associated condition, and not the cause, was matched
with four physicians having the same year of birth who died in the same
year as the subject. (This was done to make allowance for the well-known
fatal effects of smoking unconnected with dementia).
Analyses of the information obtained showed that the mean age at death
was 81 years in the 473 physicians who died with dementia; only 2% of
them died before age 65. The likelihood of any type of dementia occurring
in a smoker was the same as in non-smokers and ex-smokers (in fact, the
likelihood was 0.96 times that in non-smokers, a trivial, non-significant
difference).
The presence of Alzheimer's disease was also unrelated to smoking, the
likelihood being 0.99 (or virtually the same) in smokers, compared with
non- and ex-smokers; the average age at death of the Alzheimer subjects
was 82 years. For the other types of dementia (vascular dementia, Lewy-body
dementia etc) there was also no evidence of a different risk between smokers
and non- and ex-smokers.
This prospective study provides different results from those of the smaller
earlier retrospective studies, showing conclusively that prolonged smoking
does not increase or decrease the likelihood that men will develop dementia
of any type, including Alzheimer's disease. The study was large, prolonged,
and follow-up was just about complete, with extremely careful checks and
balances to exclude any factors that might inflence the results unfairly.
We can draw two important conclusions. First, we should not attach too
much importance to retrospective analyses, provided we can afford the
time to wait for a well-designed prospective study to be completed. Second,
these results should remove one more excuse that smokers have used to
continue their habit. The slight protective effect that smoking appears
to have on Parkinson's disease (and possibly also on ulcerative colitis)
is clearly outweighed by the serious adverse effects it has on other organs.
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